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author | DongHun Kwak <dh0128.kwak@samsung.com> | 2021-10-15 10:51:13 +0900 |
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committer | DongHun Kwak <dh0128.kwak@samsung.com> | 2021-10-15 10:51:13 +0900 |
commit | b65cb2d67b946445ba89e1938cee8527969922cd (patch) | |
tree | e3aff002a9b580aef8a80eb3823786993c3a5c64 /doc/custcmd.doc | |
parent | 738086af77ab085837d0044a33a5d954a3edc6f5 (diff) | |
download | doxygen-b65cb2d67b946445ba89e1938cee8527969922cd.tar.gz doxygen-b65cb2d67b946445ba89e1938cee8527969922cd.tar.bz2 doxygen-b65cb2d67b946445ba89e1938cee8527969922cd.zip |
Imported Upstream version 1.8.7upstream/1.8.7
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/custcmd.doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/custcmd.doc | 16 |
1 files changed, 8 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/doc/custcmd.doc b/doc/custcmd.doc index 70d52e4..db41f95 100644 --- a/doc/custcmd.doc +++ b/doc/custcmd.doc @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ * * * - * Copyright (C) 1997-2013 by Dimitri van Heesch. + * Copyright (C) 1997-2014 by Dimitri van Heesch. * * Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its * documentation under the terms of the GNU General Public License is hereby @@ -37,10 +37,10 @@ The simplest form of an alias is a simple substitution of the form ALIASES += sideeffect="\par Side Effects:\n" \endverbatim will allow you to - put the command \\sideeffect (or \@sideeffect) in the documentation, which + put the command `\sideeffect` (or `@sideeffect`) in the documentation, which will result in a user-defined paragraph with heading <b>Side Effects:</b>. -Note that you can put \\n's in the value part of an alias to insert newlines. +Note that you can put `\n`'s in the value part of an alias to insert newlines. Also note that you can redefine existing special commands if you wish. @@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ combination with aliases. \section custcmd_complex Aliases with arguments Aliases can also have one or more arguments. In the alias definition you then need to specify the number of arguments between curly braces. In the value part of the -definition you can place \\x markers, where 'x' represents the argument number starting +definition you can place `\x` markers, where '`x`' represents the argument number starting with 1. Here is an example of an alias definition with a single argument: @@ -85,11 +85,11 @@ inside the comment block and it will expand to where the command with a single argument would still work as shown before. Aliases can also be expressed in terms of other aliases, e.g. a new command -\\reminder can be expressed as a \\xrefitem via an intermediate \\xreflist command +`\reminder` can be expressed as a \ref cmdxrefitem "\\xrefitem" via an intermediate `\xreflist` command as follows: \verbatim -ALIASES += xreflist{3}="\xrefitem \1 \"\2\" \"\3\" " \ -ALIASES += reminder="\xreflist{reminders,Reminder,Reminders}" \ +ALIASES += xreflist{3}="\xrefitem \1 \"\2\" \"\3\" " +ALIASES += reminder="\xreflist{reminders,Reminder,Reminders}" \endverbatim Note that if for aliases with more than one argument a comma is used as a separator, @@ -98,7 +98,7 @@ i.e. \verbatim \l{SomeClass,Some text\, with an escaped comma} \endverbatim -given the alias definition of \\l in the example above. +given the alias definition of `\l` in the example above. \section custcmd_nesting Nesting custom command |